delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The directed verdict is the basis of the only assignment of error, the contention being that the Circuit Court had no right under the state of the evidence to say conclusively that probable cause existed for the prosecution of the plaintiff in the criminal proceedings mentioned. The rule on this subject is thus prescribed in Hess v. Oregon Baking Co., 31 Or. 503, 512 (49 Pac. 803, 805):
“The credibility of the evidence, and what facts it proves, are for the jury; but whether such facts do or do not constitute probable cause is a question exclu*132sively for the court. The court should therefore, by means of a hypothetical instruction, group the facts which the evidence tends to prove, and instruct the jury that, if they find such facts to have been established, thby must find that there was or was not probable cause” — citing many authorities.
The testimony in the case is voluminous, having taken a very wide range. An extended rehearsal of the evidence is impracticable within the limits of an ordinary opinion, and only a brief epitome can be here set down. The plaintiff here had been several years in the employment of the defendant, who was conducting business as a furrier in the City of Portland. The theory of the defendant was that he missed 97 mink skins as the result of .an inventory made by him immediately after the plaintiff left his service; that the plaintiff in a few days thereafter established himself in business as a rival furrier in Portland; that, having procured a search-warrant, he found in the store where the plaintiff was in business at least 10 mink skins which the defendant here claims as his own; that while the plaintiff was in his employ no one had access to the place where the furs were stored, except the parties to this suit. In short, he relied upon what he claims to be the fact that his goods had recently been stolen, and found by him in the possession of the plaintiff here soon afterward, and that his custody of the property was wholly unexplained; his deduction being that there was probable cause to believe the plaintiff guilty of the larceny. It must be admitted that there is some testimony tending to explain this theory.
On the other hand, the contention of the plaintiff is that many other employees of the defendant had equal access to the place where the furs were stored; that he left the service of the defendant, and was after*133ward employed by another furrier having no interest in the business himself; that his new employer had purchased furs from a broker which were similar in appearance and marked like those claimed by the defendant; that the particular furs found in the store where the plaintiff was at work had been delivered to him by his new employer only a short time before; that when the defendant came to search the store he was told by the new employer that the furs found belonged to the latter and had been purchased from a broker; and that with this knowledge of the real truth the defendant stubbornly persisted in causing his arrest and prosecution with the result noted. The record contains ample evidence also to support this theory of the case.
2. It is sufficient to say that if in fact the plaintiff was the only one besides the defendant who had access to the place where the furs were stored, if indeed they were stolen, and if in truth those afterward found in the possession of the plaintiff were the defendant’s property, which possession was unexplained, there would exist probable cause for the apprehension of the plaintiff. On the other hand, if many other people had an equal opportunity to purloin the goods, if the goods found in the possession of the plaintiff were delivered to him by his new employer and were in fact the property of the latter, and these facts were made known to the defendant prior to or at the time he caused the arrest of the plaintiff, then no probable cause for the prosecution would exist. There is a marked controversy in the testimony about the facts which are necessary as a foundation of the court’s legal conclusion that there was probable cause for the prosecution. The same is true in respect to the facts upon which as a basis the court should say to the jury *134as a matter of law that there was want of probable cause. The issue of probable cause, or absence thereof, involves a mixed question of law and fact, the latter ingredient of which invariably must be submitted to the jury, if there is any dispute in the testimony on that point. It is only where the necessary facts are admitted, or else are proven by testimony which the law makes conclusive, that the court can take the case from the jury on the matter of probable cause or lack thereof. Each horn of the dilemma arising from the divergent theories of the parties should have been presented to the jury by an appropriate hypothesis, accompanied by a declaration of the law applicable to each, leaving to the jury the duty of determining which of the two postulates was true in point of fact. The Circuit Court was right in denying the defendant’s motion for judgment of nonsuit, because there was testimony which the jury could consider as sustaining the complaint. This being true, it was not only inconsistent, but also erroneous, to direct a verdict for the defendant.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Reversed and Remanded.
Mr. Chief Justice McBride, Mr. Justice Moore and Mr. Justice Ramsey concur.